Daily Mail

Mother-in-law bins officer’s crime files

Details on 55 sex offenders and victims found in skip

- By Alex Ward

SENSITIVE files on more than 50 paedophile­s and their victims ended up in a skip after being thrown out by a police sergeant’s mother-in-law, a disciplina­ry hearing was told.

Sergeant Martin Skirving-Chehab had left the documents in two Aldi bags with out-of-date tins of tuna and soup under his kitchen table.

His unsuspecti­ng relative later threw the bags out with the rubbish. The papers were found 18 days later by a dog walker in the skip close to the officer’s home.

They contained addresses, phone numbers, bank details and car registrati­on details on 55 child sex offenders, as well as informatio­n about victims – and were later handed to a national newspaper.

Skirving-Chehab, 42, who had taken the papers home from a police unit for managing sex offenders in Middlesbro­ugh, was suspended by Cleveland Police. He denies gross misconduct, and told investigat­ing officers it was ‘a complete fluke’ the papers had ended up in the skip.

The hearing was told offenders and victims were offered the chance to relocate and the incident resulted in seven complaints to the force.

Joan Smith, for Cleveland Police, told the hearing in Hartlepool that Skirving-Chehab had shown a ‘ lackadaisi­cal approach’ in dealing with the dossier. She said: ‘One can only imagine the risk to property or life if this informatio­n had fallen into the hands of vigilantes.’

Miss Smith said the sergeant’s wife had alerted him to the fact the papers had been thrown out but he had ‘failed to act on the associated risks that that material had ended up outside of his property’.

The files had originally been found in the police unit by a detective chief inspector who asked Skirving- Chehab to either file them or dispose of them properly. Instead they were left at the sergeant’s house in Hartlepool for almost two months before they were thrown out in June last year.

Skirving- Chehab accepts responsibi­lity for the documents ending up in the street but denies he acted unprofessi­onally, saying he does not believe they were stored ‘inappropri­ately’.

The incident is a fresh embarrassm­ent for the Cleveland force, which has been branded the worst in the country.

A damning report from Her Majesty’s Inspectora­te of Constabula­ry earlier this year found Cleveland to be failing in every major aspect of its work – a first for any force in the country.

The hearing continues.

 ??  ?? Files: Skirving-Chehab
Files: Skirving-Chehab

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